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| Vietnamese   soldiers confront a delegation led by members of the opposition Sam  Rainsy Party  trying to visit a controversial border marker yesterday.  (Photo by: Heng Chivoan) | 
Tuesday, 14 December 2010
Meas Sokchea
The Phnom Penh Post
A group of 18 opposition Sam Rainsy  Party officials said yesterday that Vietnamese border police crossed  onto Cambodian land and forcefully prevented them from visiting a border  demarcation post.
The SRP officials said a brief  scuffle broke out when 12 Vietnamese police officials intercepted the  delegation in Kampong Cham province’s Memot district, about 100 metres  from demarcation post 103. 
SRP lawmaker Son Chhay, who led  the delegation of opposition officials, said the interception likely  indicated that the demarcation post had been planted inside the  Cambodian border.
“We are worried about how that demarcation post was planted ... we regret that we cannot reach there,” he said.
“If Vietnam does not allow us to visit, it is more and more suspect.”
He said that officials had  already visited border demarcation posts 108 and 109, which he claimed  had been planted on Cambodian land, resulting in 14 villages being ceded  to Vietnam.
According to his map and claims  from local residents, villages that were formally part of Da, Muol and  Ruong communes, were now on the Vietnam side of the border posts, he  said.
But Var Kimhong, Cambodia’s  senior minister in charge of border affairs, denied that Vietnamese  officials had prevented the visit to post 103.
“Based on my team working at  that location … what SRP said is not true; it is an exaggeration,” he  said, adding that he believed the delegation had visited post 103 and  that Vietnamese officials had declined permission for the delegation to  visit a site on their side of the border.
“They said that they would not  bring them, it is Vietnamese land and if [they go] Vietnam would arrest  [them],” Var Kimhong said.
He said SRP claims that Vietnamese police had pushed them were also untrue.
“No one pushed [them],” he said. 
He also disputed Son Chhay’s claims that land had been ceded to Vietnam. 
“What map? Is it an SRP map?” he said. “I don’t know why he has alleged nonsense like this.”
But residents along the border claimed yesterday that they had lost land.
Yem Muon said she had lost more  than 9 hectares of land in Memot district’s Da commune as a result of  border demarcations being moved.
“I lost all this land. What can I  have to feed my children?” she said. “I farmed [this land] since my  grandparents and my parents did.” 
Ou Virak, president of the  Cambodian Centre for Human Rights, said it was important that the  government ensure open communication and access to the border posts.
“I think so far the demarcation process has been very secretive and silent,” he said. 
“I think the government’s  actions are creating more and more conspiracy theories and fuelling  speculation about the feeling that something is not right about the  whole process.”
Officials from the  Vietnamese-Cambodian Border Affairs Committee met on December 1 to  evaluate bids by five international companies vying for a two-year  contract to create topographical maps of the two countries’ sensitive  shared border.
Var Kimhong said following the meeting that new maps were necessary to replace existing maps that are nearly six decades old.
Proposals were accepted from  BLOM Geomatics AS (Denmark), IGN France International, Kokusai Kogyo  Corporation (Japan), Samboo Engineering Company (South Korea) and  Pasco-FINNMAP (Japan/Finland). The cost for preparing the maps has been  estimated at between US$1.5 and $4.5 million dollars.
The committee was expected to announce its selection of the company last week, but a final decision is still pending.
ADDITIONAL REPORTING BY MATT LUNDY

 






 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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